“这是反基督者。你看不见吗?”尼日利亚基督徒对新冠肺炎的认知与宗教健康辩论

IF 0.6 3区 哲学 0 RELIGION Studies in World Christianity Pub Date : 2021-03-01 DOI:10.3366/SWC.2021.0325
Emmanuel Chiwetalu Ossai
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引用次数: 11

摘要

宗教如何影响健康?对这个问题的回答表明,宗教信仰可能对人们的健康产生积极和消极的影响。本文关注宗教对信徒如何感知和处理疾病的影响,旨在通过考虑新冠肺炎在撒哈拉以南非洲的尼日利亚是如何解释的,部分原因是她的大多数公民都认为自己是基督徒或穆斯林。它利用2020年3月至5月期间收集的数据探索了该国对新冠肺炎的看法,这些数据来自(a)对该国南部各州基督徒的深入采访,(b)脸书民意调查和(c)尼日利亚Punch和Vanguard报纸网站上的文章和读者评论。调查结果证实了以下观点:(a)宗教可能对人们对疾病的看法和反应产生负面影响,(b)宗教组织可以在抗击疾病的斗争中发挥有益的合作伙伴作用。然而,这些数据还表明,宗教反应是如何在政治失败的背景下发生的,而政治失败反过来又是对尼日利亚公共健康的重大威胁。这表明,在存在这种无益关系的社会中,要理解并成功应对对疾病的负面宗教和文化观点,考虑更广泛的政治和社会经济现实如何帮助塑造这些观念或对宗教解释和治疗来源的偏好可能是有用的[作者摘要]《世界基督教研究》版权归爱丁堡大学出版社所有,其内容不得在没有版权持有人的明确书面许可然而,用户可以打印、下载或通过电子邮件发送文章供个人使用。本摘要可能会被删节。对副本的准确性不作任何保证。完整摘要用户应参考材料的原始出版版本(版权适用于所有摘要)
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‘It is the antichrist. Can't you see?’ Perceptions of COVID-19 among Nigeria's Christians and the Religion—Health Debate
How does religion influence health? Responses to this question have shown that religious beliefs could have positive and negative effects on people's health This paper focuses on religion's influence on how believers perceive and deal with diseases, and it aims to contribute to the debate by considering how COVID-19 was interpreted in Sub-Saharan Africa's Nigeria, which has been regarded as very religious, partly because the majority of her citizens identify as Christians or Muslims It explores perceptions of COVID-19 in the country using data collected between March and May 2020, from (a) in-depth interviews with Christians in various states in the southern part of the country, (b) Facebook polls and (c) articles and readers' comments on the websites of Nigeria's Punch and Vanguard Newspapers The findings corroborate the notion that (a) religion could have a negative influence on people's views about, and responses to, diseases, and that (b) religious organisations could serve as helpful partners in the fight against diseases However, the data also demonstrate how the religious responses occurred within a context of political failure, which, in turn, is a major threat to public health in Nigeria This suggests that to understand and successfully deal with the negative religious and cultural views about diseases in societies where such unhelpful relationships exist, it may be useful to consider how wider political and socio-economic realities help to shape those perceptions or the preference for religious sources of interpretation and healing [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] Copyright of Studies in World Christianity is the property of Edinburgh University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use This abstract may be abridged No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract (Copyright applies to all Abstracts )
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